Question regarding tidal boundaries:
A few friends and I were fishing for pinks at a river mouth this weekend (I'll leave the river unnamed, though I'm sure some of you can guess where it is) that does not have a specified tidal boundary, and that is closed in the non-tidal portion to any salmon fishing. This particular river has a large estuary and tidal flats section then moves up to a channel that is clearly tidal influenced before hitting what I think most reasonable people would consider the river proper.
4 DFO officers did a spot check on us, and in speaking with three of them separately while the others checked licenses etc, each had a different definition of the tidal boundary:
1) First one (youngish guy) stated it was a particular structure (clear landmark) along the aforementioned channel leading to the river
2) Second essentially said, "just be reasonable - we don't get a clear definition either, and it makes it hard for us to enforce. Basically just don't be obviously fishing in the river, respect the resource, etc".
3) Third (most senior) was the most confident with his definition: When the tide is low, the boundary is where the river ends, then the boundary essentially shifts up river as the tide comes in. This seemed like it leaves it up to a complete judgement call, but it does seem to match up a bit with the DFO definition: "Unless otherwise specified, the tidal boundary is a straight line drawn between the two most seaward points of land located on either side of the mouth of a river or stream"
We were really erring on the side of caution where we were fishing so it didn't really matter in the end, and overall it was a positive interaction. It did really make me feel for these guys who have to try an enforce the constantly changing and vague regulations.
So basically, my question is: has anyone ever heard of a "moving" tidal boundary like this before? Secondly, is there a reason they don't just throw up a white triangle on every river to mark the tidal boundary and make life easier for everyone?